Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona · Page 16

Page 16 article text (OCR)

Ktt-utitlU
CltY
"'
8
'Hit
Arizona
Republic
"t>
PfcoeM*,
faes,,
Nov.
4,
1969
__
.___
ffkmrttold
|suspect
in
f
parking
lot
•*'
A
Scottsdale
man
accused
!3<tf
kidnaping
a
22-year-old
;t,Phoenix
housewife
from
a
.*
Phoenix
College
parking
lot
'*&nd
raping
her
in
the
desert
'<inear
Chandler
was
identified
',*by
a
witness
yesterday
as
;*
having
been
in
the
parking
the
day
the
crime
oc-
•-"
The
identification
of
Henry
Gerald
Pyhel,
29,
of
8235
E.
Osborn
Road,
was
made
by
state
witness
Mrs.
Norene
Beehler
at
the
first
day
of
a
preliminary
hearing
before
Justice
of
the
Peace
Ralph
Jenkins
in
Northwest
Phoenix
Justice
Court.
Mrs.
Beehler,
of
3795
W.
Luke
Ave.,
told
Deputy
County
Attorney
Joseph
Schoepf
hat
she
saw
Pyhel,
whom
she
pointed
out
in
court,
in
the
parking
lot
as
she
left
her
job
as
student
assistant
in
the
college
library
at
4
p.m.
Sept.
18
and
made
her
way
to
her
car
before
going
home.
THE
CASE
was
heard
before
Jenkins
because
Justice
of
the
Peace
Marion
Reno,
who
ordinarily
presides
in
the
northwest
Phoenix
precinct,
disqualified
himself
after
the
defense
filed
a
motion
of
bias
and
prejudice
against
him.
The
motion
stemmed
from
Reno's
attempt
to
raise
Py-
hel's
bond
from
the
original
$13,750
to
$38,500.
The
defense
appealed
the
increase
and,
alter
a
Superior
Court
ruling
in
Pyhel's
favor,
the
bond
now
stands
at
$25,300.
Pyhel,
who
was
arrested
on
Sept.:23,-is
charged
with
kid-
naping,
assault
with
a
deadly
weapon
and
grand
theft,
auto
in
the
Phoenix
court.
Charges
of
rape
and
lewd
and
lascivious
acts
are
pending
against
him
in
Chandler
Justice
Court,
where
his
preliminary
hearing
is
set
before
Judge
Coy
Beasley
at
9:30
a.m.
Nov.
19.
:
PYHEL
BECAME
a
suspect
in
the
case-
after
police
noticed
a
resemblance
between
sketches
of
her
assailant
drawn
by
the
victim,
an
artist,
and
a
mug
shot
of
Py-
hel
which
was
in
the
possession
of
the
Scottsdale
police
department.
•'...•
At;.,
the
time
of
his
arrest,
Pyhel,
a
coodinator
for
the
Salt
River
Project,
was
free
on
$300
bond
from
Scottsdale
City
.'Court
on
an
indecent
exposure
charge.
After
-Mrs.
Beehler's
testimony
yesterday,
the
hearing
was
continued
to
an
unspecified
date
next
week.
Attorney's
aide
quits
Bill
Kayanaugh,
administrative
assistant
to
Maricopa
County
Atty.
Moise
Berger,
quit
yesterday
as
the
result
of
a
salary
dispute
between
Berger
and
the
Board
of
Supervisors.
:
Berger
wanted
the
board
to
raise
Kavanaugh's
salary
$3,500,
to
$13,800
annually,
and
the
board
refused.
Kavanaugh
is
reportedly
going
to
accept
employment
with
the
Internal
Revenue
Service
in
Los
Angeles
at
a
cut
in
salary.
Berger
had
told
board
members
that
Kavanaugh
had
been
offered
a
job
with
the
IRS
at
$14,500.
However,
a
spokesman
for
the
federal
office
in
California
told
Supervisor
Bob
Stark
that
Kavanaugh
had
been
offered
less
than
$10,000
to
come
to
work.
,
needle
in
gift
goodies
Two
razor
blades
and
a
needle
were
found
in
apples
and
candy
handed
out
during
Halloween
trick
or
treating
Friday
night
in
the
neighborhood
of
16th
Street
and
Bell
Road,
police
said
yesterday.
Detective
Ken
Troutman
appealed
for
information
that
might
expose
the
identity
of
the.sadistic
prankster.
Residents
move
out
from
New
York
City
New
York
Times
Service
NEW
YORK
-
New
York
and
a
further
decline
of
City's
population
has
resumed
1^700
to
7,964,200
as
of
July
"ITCHING
TORTURE
Was
Killing
Me,
wMl
I
/ou«tf
a
wHtoe
cmtf
sot
joyful
relief,"
o_u
are
tortured
by
vaginal
Itch,
Itch,
or
if
your
skin
Itches
Ice
mad
here's
good
BeWNowyou'wn
get
glorious
relief
wherever
you
itch
with
a
pr
wjgue
jnedlc*UpR
attack*
fungi
ana
toaeferjft
while
it
gently
_
soothes
sore
»r
Inflamed
tissue.
Quiets
Irritated
hing
stops,
natural
.don't
6.u«er
t
get
Rds
go
scratching
stop5..natura}
startf.
So
don't
'Tl
today
at
your
Parachutists
mourn
'Pepsi
Kid'
a
downward
trend
again
after
reaching
a
peak
of
8,019,000
as
of
July
1,
1966,
estimates
obtained
from
the
Census
Bureau
indicated
yesterday.
The
bureau's
latest
study
estimated
a
decline
of
35,200
people
in
the
next
year
to
7,983,900
as
of
July
1,
1967,
Killer
youth
sentenced
to
5
to
7
years
A
17-year-old
youth
who
killed
a
man
after
an
argument
over
who
would
be
served
first
at
a
hamburger
stand,
was
sentenced
yesterday
to
5
to
7
years
in
prison.
Leon
Curtis
Adair,
then
16,
stabbed
Alfred
Luna,
23,
of
Casa
Grande,
in
the
heart
May
24
after
following
him
to
his
car
during
a
fight
in
front
of
the
Jack-In-The-Box,
1601
E.
Van
Buren.
Adair
was
convicted
Oct.
10
by
a
Superior
Court
jury
of
voluntary
manslaughter.
Yesterday,
as
Superior
Court
Judge
Robert
L.
Myers
handed
down
the
sentence,
obscenities
were
shouted
by
several
spectators
in
the
courtroom.
The
spectators
supported
a
plea
by
Adair's
attorney
Gerald
Alston
that
the
youth
be
placed
on
probation.
In
ordering
the
sentence,
Myers
said:.
"...this
court
finds
you
.....are
guilty
of
the
crime.
Because
of
the
age
of
the
defendant
in
this
matter
I
have
given
the
decision
very
serious
study
...
but
in
light
of
all
facts
surrounding
this
case
and
his
past
record
I
feel
I
cannot
place
him
on
probation."
In
July,
Juvenile
Court
Judge
William
Holohan
remanded
Adair
from
Juvenile
Court
for
trial
as
an
adult
and
Adair
was
charged
with
second-degree
murder.
Adair
had
appeared
in
Juvenile
Court
several
times
for
fighting
and
stealing.
During
the
three-day
trial
in
the
court
of
Myers,
Adah-
testified
he
stabbed
Luna
in
self-defense.
1,
1968.
Other
census
data
indicated
that
substantial
migration
out
of
Manhattan
and
Brooklyn
played
a
major
influence
in
the
city's
population
changes.
Manhattan
was
estimated
to
have
had
196,900
more
people
moving
out
than
in
between
1960
and
1966,
the
latest
years
available,
and
Brooklyn's
net
outward
flow
was
put
at
99,300.
the
city
as
a
whole,
there
were
185,900
more
people
moving
out
than
in
from
1960
to
1966,
even
though
the
Bronx,
Queens
and
Staten
Island
showed
a
net
migration
on
the
plus
side.
During
the
decade
of
the
1950s,
the
city
had
witnessed
a
falling
off
in
population
—
down
109,973
from
7,891,957
in
1950
to
7,781,984
in
1960.
This
was
a
decade
when
the
city
appeared
to
be
losing
heavily
as
middle-income
residents
moved
to
the
suburbs.
By
DANIEL
BEN-HORIN
They
mourned
the
"Pepsi
Kid"
last
night.
Rick
Ornelas
spoke
about
him:
"He
went
to
the
bartender
and
asked
for
a
cola.'
The
bartender
said,
'What
do
you
want
in
it?'
John
said
'Nothing'
and
the
bartender
laughed
and
said,
'It
takes
all
kinds'."
The
Pepsi
Kid,
John
Brockman,
28,
of
1007
S.
19th
Ave.,
spent
Saturday
night
with
fellow
members
of
the
Rebel
Sky
Divers
Parachuting
Club
at
a
barbecue
and
parachute
exhibition
sponsored
by
the
82nd
Airborne
Association.
At
3
a.m.
Sunday
morning,
he
was
dead
—
shot
three
times
during
a
brawl
a
block
from
his
home.
Last
night,
20
fellow
club
members
emptied
their
pockets
of
$169
for
Brockman's
widow
and
child,
heard
how
he
came
to
die,
and
lamented
both
his
death
and
the
fact
that
their
sport
and
their
club
would
become
linked
in
the
public
mind
with
drinking,
fighting
and
shooting.
Early
in
the
meeting
at
the
Scottsdale
okays
increase
in
pay
for
Indian
landfill
game
charged
at
fair
Two
men
were
charged
yesterday
with
obtaining
money
or
property
by
confidence
game
in
a
football
dart
game
at
the
Arizona
State
Fair,
police
reported.
The
charges
were
filed
against
Robert
Barnard,
74,
of
Los
Angeles,
and
Vaughn
Land,
38,
of
the
Copa
Inn,
2834
E.
Van
Buren,
before
Northwest
Precinct
Justice
of
the
Peace
Marion
Reno.
Police
arrested
the
two
men
Sunday
after
they
witnessed
the
operation
of
the
game.
The
players,
police
said,
attempted
to
score
"100
yards"
by
throwing
darts
at
a
numbered
board.
Accomplishing
this,
officers
said,
the
players
were
told
they
would
win
a
portable
television
set.
The
odds
of
gaining
the
100
yards
on
the
board,
police
said,
were
impossible.
The
game
was
confiscated
by
officers
under
a
city
ordinance
prohibiting
frauds
or
lotteries.
SCOTTSDALE
-
The
City
Council
last
night
voted
an
eventual
increase
in
payment
to
the
Salt
River
Indian
Reservation
for
use
of
reservation
property
for
a
sanitary
landfill.
The
council
voted
to
extend
the
present
contract
that
calls
for
payment
of
,5
cents
per
cubic
yard
of
refuse
delivered
to
the
landfill.
This
is
in
addition
to
the
fee
of
approximately
25
cents
per
cubic
yard
paid
to
the
2
students
hurt
hi
auto
accident
SCOTTSDALE
-
Two
Arizona
State
University
students
were
injured
last
-nightj
one
critically,
5
when
ttie
car
in
which
they
were
driving
veered
into
the
path
of
a
vehicle
driven
by
a
Maricopa
County
sheriff's
deputy,
police
said.
Frederick
E.
Zweig,
19,
was
reported
in
extremely
critical
condition
at
Scottsdale
Baptist
Hospital,
and
his
passenger,
Robert
D.
Throop,
19,
was
reported
in
fan-
condition.
Both
are
from
Nogales,
police
said.
Officer
Carter
Crile
said
the
students
were
northbound
in
the
800
block
of
North
Hayden
Road
in
the
curb
lane
when
they
slowed
and
suddenly
turned
left
into
the
path
of
a
northbound
vehicle
in
the
outside
lane
driven
by
Deputy
David
D.
Vodika.
Vodika
suffered
minor
injuries.
Crile
said
the
car
driven
by
Zweig
spun
three
tunes
and
traveled
175
feet
north
after
being
struck
broadside
by
Vodika's
vehicle.
Indians
landfill.
for
operating
the
The
5
cent
figure
is
to
be
increased
to
1
l
h
cents
effective
March
1,
1971,
the
council
decided.
In
another
matter,
the
council
voted
to
again
designate
the
Maricopa
County
government
as
the
city's
coordinator
for
Office
of
Economic
Opportunity
'antipoverty
programs.
The
council
will
meet
at
8
p.m.
today
for
planning
and
zoning
matters.
jii-1,18,
killed
in
rollover
An
18-year-old.
Phoenix
girl
was
fatally'injured
in
a
one-
car
accident
early
yesterday,
the
State
Department
of
Public
Safety
reported.
The
victim,
Roberta
Lee
Hall
of
4426
N.
47th
Ave.,
was
dead
on
arrival
at
,,Yuma
Parkview
Hospital,
investigators
said.
The
Arizona
Highway
Patrol
reported
Miss
Hall
was
a
passenger
in'a
westbound
car
which
ran
off
U.S.
80
7
miles
west
of
Dateland
and
overturned.
The
driver,
Darrell
James
Keel,
19,
of
6113
W.
Avalon,
was
reported
in
fair
condition
at
the
hospital,
officers
said.
Keel
told
investigators
he
fell
asleejp
while
driving.
home
of
club
president
Ornelas,
at
4440
N.
27th
Ave.,
the
members
voiced
disapproval
of
newspaper
stories
detailing
police
accounts
of
the
shooting,
Brockman,
police
said,
was
driving
two
fellow
members
of
the
club
home
after
they
had
all
been
drinking.
At
19th
Avenue
and
Buckeye
Road,
Brockman
and
one
of
his
friends
started
a
fight
with
the
driver
of
another
car.
During
the
fight,
a
third
car
drove
up;
four
shots
were
fired
from
within
it,
three
going
into
Brockman's
back;
and
then
the
car
sped
off.
Brockman
died
in
an
ambulance.
Police
so
far
have
no
suspect.
They
have
requested
that
bystanders
who
informed
a
policeman
at
17th
Avenue
and
Buckeye
Road
of
the
shooting
come
forward
with
information,
if
they
have
any.
"Even
here,
at
our
home,
we
tried
to
get
him
to
take
a
drink,
but
he
never
would,"
Deana
Ornelas,
wife
of
the
club
president,
repeated
last
Ruling
asked
on
obscenity
The
Maricopa
County
attorney's
office
is
expected
to
file
today
a
request
for
a
court
hearing
to
determine
whether
or
not
a
controversial
Swedish
motion
picture
now
playing
in
Phoenix
is
obscene.
The
petition
is
scheduled
to..
be
filed
at
9:30
a.m.
by
County
Atty.
Moise
Berger,
The
Arizona
Republic
learned.
The
film
is
"I
Am
Curious
(Yellow),"
now
playing
at
the
Vista
Theater,
215
N.
Central.
Last
week,
Sheriff
John
Mummert
was
forced.to
return
a
copy
of
the
film
.he
had
seized
from
the
theater.
Superior
Court
Judge
Paul
W.
LaPrade
ruled
that
the
search
warrant
Mummert
used:to
obtain
the
film
had
been
issued
illegally.
The
movie,
in
•
Swedish
'with
English
subtitles,
"
includes
graphic
portrayal
of
sex
acts.
A
U.S.
Appeals
Court
in
New
York
ruled
that
the
film
was
not
obscene
when
the
government
attempted
to
block
its
importation.
LaPrade,
in
addition
.to
hearing
Berger's
.petition,
is
to
hear
also
a
request
from
the
film
distributors
that
Mummert
be
blocked
from
ever
again
seizing
a
copy
of
the
film.
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night,
gently
disputing
that
Brockman
would
ever
have
become
so
drunk
as
to
provoke
a
fight.
Then
Ray
Vela,
21,
of
1007
S.
19th
Ave.,
who
rode
with
Brockman
that
night,
entered
the
meeting
and
corroborated
the
police
account.
He
told
how,
at
the
barbecue,
Brockinan
had
suddenly
switched
from
the
straight
Pepsi
he
had
been
drinking
for
eight
months
to
straight
vodka,
and
then
to
mixed
drinks.
"He
had
a
lot
of
trouble
with
his
wife
being
in
the
hospital,"
Vela
said,
"And
he
couldn't
take
care
of
his
little
girl
by
himself.
He
just
wanted
to
get
rid
of
it
that
night."
As
Vela
told
them
what
they
didn't
want
to
know,
the
club
members
fell
silent.
The
trim
men
with
handsome
wives
sat
somberly
in
the
Ornlas'
tidy
little
den.
As
they
accepted
the
fact
that
it
really
had
happened,
that
Brockman
had
been
drinking,
that
the
police
were
correct
in
their
account,
their
attention
turned
from
the
individual
who
was
gone
to
the
Phoenix
girl
dies
of
bums
An'
8-year-old
Phoenix
girl
died
last
night
of
burns
she
suffered
when
her
dress
caught
fire
Oct.
20,
police
reported.
The
victim,
^Melissa
Mello,
daughter
of
.Mr,
and
Mrs,
Mel
,F.
Mello
-
of.-S214E,
Presidio,
died
in
the
.intensive
care
unit
.ofMaricop'a.
County
Hospital.
Detective
Ron
Gaillard
said
the
girt
suffered
the
burns
when
her
dress
caught
fire
as
she
was
standing
in
front
of
a
heater
at
her
home.
She
suffered
second'
and
third-de-
dree
bums
over
70
per
cent
of
her
body,
he
said.
YOUR
FRANCHISED
LOWREY
ORGAN
DEALER
4544
N.
Central
MDERMAN
PIANO
&
ORGAN
CO.
Ph.
264-0431
LAWN
SPRINKLER
SYSTEMS
MANUAL
or
AUTOMATIC
FREE
ESTIMATES
Phone
959-2940
APACHE^
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New
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It
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club
that
was
still
with
them.
"John
Brockriian
was
my
student.
He
made
his
first
jump
Oct.
12,"
Ornelas,
one
of
the
club's
six
licensed
jumpmasters,
had
said
at
the
meeting's
veiy
start.
At
the
end,
Gary
Fuller,
a
medical
student
at
Arizona
State
University;
Courtney
Varner,
the
lawyer
who
wons
the
club's
plane;
Ornelas,
an
assembly
line
inspector,
and
the
others
talked
about
the
club's
varied
aspects.
They
stressed
that
it
wasn't
like
a
Hell's
Angels
motorcycle
club;
they
talked
about
parachuting
standards
and
meets
with
other
clubs,
and
they
sadly
pointed
out
that
Brockman's
was
the
first
death
in
the
club's
seven-
year
history.
Someone
mentioned
the
new
patches
the
club
members
had
ordered.
"When
did
we
get
them?"
"Saturday,"
Ornelas
said.
"Just
in
time
for
him
to
put
.his
on."
JH
WESTERN
H
SAVINGS*
FACTORY
AUTHORIZED
.PEN
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3440
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Central
*
264-7744
KING
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14
N.
CENTRAL
(6th
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DOWNTOWN
•
252.8112
DOES
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~.M
p,,l,cip«i»
9
CHEVRON
DEALERS
THIS
WEEK:
.
"Casseroles
and
Quick
Meals"
32
pages
'•V
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Advertisement
i
NEW
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I